1. Pseudo-insular glioma syndrome: illustrative cases.
- Author
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Haddad, Alexander F, Young, Jacob S, Morshed, Ramin A, Josephson, S Andrew, Cha, Soonmee, and Berger, Mitchel S
- Subjects
ANA = antinuclear antibodies ,CNS = central nervous system ,CSF = cerebrospinal fluid ,CT = computed tomography ,DTI = diffusion tensor imaging ,DWI = diffusion-weighted imaging ,FLAIR = fluid-attenuated inversion recovery ,LGG = lower-grade glioma ,MCA = middle cerebral artery ,MR = magnetic resonance ,MRI ,MRI = magnetic resonance imaging ,MS = multiple sclerosis ,PACNS = primary angiitis of the central nervous system ,PET = positron emission tomography ,PWI = perfusion-weighted imaging ,TDL = tumefactive demyelinating lesion ,imaging ,low-grade glioma ,mimic ,vasculopathy ,Rare Diseases ,Neurosciences ,Brain Cancer ,Cancer ,Brain Disorders ,Clinical Research ,Biomedical Imaging - Abstract
BackgroundLower-grade insular gliomas often appear as expansile and infiltrative masses on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). However, there are nonneoplastic lesions of the insula, such as demyelinating disease and vasculopathies, that can mimic insular gliomas.ObservationsThe authors report two patients who presented with headaches and were found to have mass lesions concerning for lower-grade insular glioma based on MRI obtained at initial presentation. However, on the immediate preoperative MRI obtained a few weeks later, both patients had spontaneous and complete resolution of the insular lesions.LessonsTumor mimics should always be in the differential diagnosis of brain masses, including those involving the insula. The immediate preoperative MRI (within 24-48 hours of surgery) must be compared carefully with the initial presentation MRI to assess interval change that suggests tumor mimics to avoid unnecessary surgical intervention.
- Published
- 2021